|
|
December 28 |
-
An
article from the
holiday issue of The Economist dealing with the idea of human
progress in the modern age. In the piece “Onwards and Upwards”,
there is extensive reference to the Hungarian dramatic poem “The
Tragedy of Man”, first published in 1861, by Imre Madach
(1823-1864).
-
A
comment by
Barrymore Laurence Scherer on Hector Berlioz’s ‘L’Enfance du Christ’
in the December 26 issue of The Wall Street Journal.
-
An
editorial in the December 27 issue of The Washington Post:
“Redefining Human Rights”.
|
|
December 11 |
-
An
op-ed by
Kathleen Parker in yesterday’s Washington Post: “An American Triumph
at Oslo”.
-
In the same issue, an opinion
piece by Fred Hiatt:
“Does Japan Still Matter?”.
|
|
December 9 |
-
A
news item from today’s Embassy Row of the Washington Times
featuring Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai, former Foreign Minister
Janos Martonyi, and Maximilian Teleki, president of the Hungarian
American Coalition with remarks made on the evening of December 4,
2009 at the annual Mikulas Dinner of the Hungarian American
Coalition at the Embassy of Hungary.
|
|
November 28 |
-
A press
report of an
interview with Amb. Bela Szombati in the Embassy Row column of the
Washington Times of November 18, 2009: “Ready for Rebound”.
-
A
Letter
to the Editor commenting on the above report by Frank Koszorus, Jr.
with the title “Hungary for More” in the November 27, 2009 issue of
the Washington Times.
-
In the same issue, an Embassy Row
report
featuring former Romanian Ambassador Mircea Geoana, leader of the
Social Democratic Party of Romania, and contender in the ongoing
presidential election.
|
|
November 21 |
-
An
article by
Leslie Hook in the November 20, 2009 issue of The Wall Street
Journal: “The China President Obama Didn’t See” ‘Dissident
Intellectuals have been attracted to Christianity’.
-
In the same issue of The Wall Street
Journal, a book review
by Arthur Herman: “Mercantilist Destiny” ‘America as an imperium
with the look of a great emporium’.
The book is “Dominion From Sea to Sea” by Bruce Cumings, Yale, $38,
641p.
-
An
op-ed by in
the Washington Post of November 20, 2009 by Peter R. Orszag,
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, on health care
reform: “A leap forward to better care”.
|
|
November 14 |
-
An
op-ed by Washington
Post columnist Anne Applebaum in the November 9 edition of the Post:
“After the Wall Fell” ‘ Central Europe’s success deserves more
attention’.
-
An
article in
The Washington Times of November 13, by Raphael G. Satter: “Diary
that exposed Stalin’s famine goes on display”.
|
|
November 10 |
-
In today’s Hungarian daily Magyar
Nemzet, an interview with
Maximilian Teleki, president of the Hungarian American Coalition, in
Hungarian, by Valeria Kormos.
-
Also attached, an
English translation
of the above Magyar Nemzet interview: “The Power of Non-Governmental
Organizations – Message from Overseas”.
-
Also, a
Proclamation issued by the White House, designating November 9,
2009, as World Freedom Day, on occasion of the 20th anniversary of
the fall of the Berlin Wall.
|
|
November 7 |
-
An
op-ed by Anne
Applebaum in the Washington Post of Tuesday, November 3: “Europe’s
Quiet Leader”.
-
An
interview
with Adam Michnik in the Weekend Edition of November 6, of the Wall
Street Journal, by Matthew Kaminski: “From Solidarity to Democracy”
‘A Polish dissident reflects on the liberation of Eastern Europe 20
years later’.
|
|
November 2 |
-
An English translation of an
interview with Maximilian Teleki, president of the Hungarian
Coalition, in the Hungarian weekly “Heti Valasz” of October 29,
2009, with the title: “Slovak Policies are Unacceptable”.
‘Slovak-Hungarian Clash in Washington, DC: We Were Better’. Here is
the original
Hungarian text.
-
An
article
by Paul Hollander in today’s Washington Post: “Murderous Idealism”
There is a reference to the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.
|
|
October 24 |
-
A White House
press release
issued on October 23, 2009, on occasion of the 53rd anniversary
of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.
-
An
article by Edward
Cody in yesterday’s Washington Post: “Europe’s future tangled by its
past”. There is a reference to Slovakia and the Benes Decrees.
-
An
report by
William Kole in the October 19, 2009 issue of The Washington Times:
“Communist Europe’s files still trickling out”. There is a reference
to Hungary.
|
|
October 18 |
-
A book
review by Timothy
Garton Ash in the New York Review of Books issue of November 5,
2009: “1989!”
-
A book
review by Joseph
C. Goulden in today’s Washington Times. The book is “The
Anti-Communist Manifestos: Four Books that Shaped the Cold War” by
John V. Fleming, Norton, $27.95, 368p.
-
In today’s Washington Post a book
review
by Jonathan Yardley. The book is:
“Enemies of the People” ‘My Family’s Journey to America’ by Kati
Marton, Simon & Schuster, $26, 272p.
|
|
October 13 |
-
An
article in
today’s Wall Street Journal: “US Politician Pataki’s Criticism
Peeves Slovak PM”.
-
From the weekend edition of the same
paper, a book
review by Edward E. Ericson Jr.: “Re-Entering the ‘First Circle’”
‘The authoritative text of Solzhenitsyn’s novel is finally available
in the West’.
|
|
October 7 |
-
An
op-ed in today’s Washington Post by Anthony Appiah, professor of
philosophy at Princeton University and president of the Board of
Trustees of the PEN American Center: “Russia’s War on Words”.
-
An
article by Philip Pan
in yesterday’s Washington Post: “Ukraine-Russia Tensions Evident in
Crimea”.
-
An
article
by Eli Lake in today’s Washington Times: “Rights groups see Obama
wavering”.
|
|
October 5 |
-
A
report by Eli
Lake in the October 2 issue of The Washington Times: “Obama agrees
to keep Israel’s nukes secret”.
-
An
op-ed by Jackson Diehl
in the Sunday edition of The Washington Post: “The Coming Failure on
Iran”.
-
In the same issue, an
article
by whistleblower Peter W. Galbraith: “What I Saw In the Afghan
Election”.
|
|
October 2 |
From the Washington Post, three
op-ed pieces highlighting the observance of
human rights as an important U.S. policy component towards Iran.
-
In the September 29 issue, columnist
Anne Applebaum: “A
Big Card to Play in Iran”.
-
In the September 30 issue, an opinion
piece by Robert Kagan:
“Forget the Nukes” ‘The Most Fruitful Target Is Iran’s Weakening
Regime’.
-
In the same issue: “A Human Rights
Lever for Iran” by Andrew
Albertson
and Ali G. Scotten.
|
|
September 29 |
-
From the September 25 issue of the
Wall Street Journal, a
report by Anthony
H. Cordesman: “The Iran Attack Plan”.
-
In last Saturday’s Wall Street
Journal, an
article
by David Mermelstein on Ignaz Friedman: “A Pianist Rediscovered”.
-
A book
review
by Michael Dobbs in last Sunday’s Washington Post: “The Brain That
Won Us the Cold War” There is a reference to John von Neumann.
The book is “A Fiery Peace in a Cold War” ‘Bernard Schriever and the
Ultimate Weapon’ by Neil Sheehan, Random House, $32, 534 p.
|
|
September 26 |
-
An
op-ed by Anne
Applebaum in last Tuesday’s Washington Post: “Letting Europe Drift”.
-
An
op-ed by
columnist David Broder in last Thursday’s Washington Post: “Mr.
Policy Hits a Wall” The writer makes reference to an article by
William Schambra, Director of the Hudson Institute’s Bradley Center
for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal, in National Review, with the
title: “Obama and the Policy Approach”.
-
An
op-ed
by columnist Charles Krauthammer in yesterday’s Washington Post; a
tribute to the recently departed Irving Kristol (1920-2009): “A
Great Good Man”.
|
|
September 21 |
-
An
op-ed in Sunday’s New York Times by
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates: “A Better Missile Defense for a
Safer Europe”.
-
In yesterday’s Washington Post an
article by Professor Stephen M. Walt of Harvard University:
“Settling for Failure in the Middle East” The writer is co-author of
“The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy” and contributing editor
of Foreign Policy magazine.
-
In the same issue, an
article by Clay
Risen, managing editor of “Democracy: A Journal of Ideas”, on
European politicians and the use of the internet: “Puttering Along
the Digital Autobahn”.
|
|
September 19 |
-
An
article by Jon Ward in yesterday’s
Washington Times: “U.S. missile shift tied to Russian talks” The
article features Mrs. Toby Gati, who was adviser to president
Clinton on Russia.
-
An
op-ed by David J. Kramer in
yesterday’s Washington Post: “Placating Russia Won’t Work”.
-
A
report on the death of Irving
Kristol (1920-2009) in today’s Washington Post: “Editor was
Godfather of Neoconservatism”.
|
|
September 17 |
-
An
article in last Sunday’s issue of
the Los Angeles Times: “The picnic that brought down the Berlin
Wall” ‘In one of history’s hidden turning points, a gambit by
Hungarian officials opened the door to the collapse of the Eastern
Bloc’.
-
An
op-ed by Washington columnist Anne
Applebaum in the edition of September 15: “Chipping Away at Free
Speech”.
-
A book
review in last Sunday’s
Washington Post by Jacob Heilbrunn: “Which of These Men Won the Cold
War”.
The book is “The Hawk and the Dove” ‘Paul Nitze and George Kennan,
And the History of the Cold War’ by Nicholas Thompson, Henry Holt,
$27.50, 403p.
|
|
September 12 |
-
A brief
report by Sebnem Arsu in
yesterday’s issue of The New York Times: “Turkey: Kurdish Studies
Approved”.
-
An
obituary in the September 10 issue
of the Washington Post. Physicist Louis Rosen, 91, worked with
Hungarian-born physicist Edward Teller (1908-2003) on a test to
prove that nuclear fusion has been achieved.
-
An
op-ed by columnist Paul Krugman in
the September 6 issue of The New York Times: “How Did Economists Get
It So Wrong?”
|
|
September 8 |
-
An
op-ed
by Anne Applebaum in today’s Washington Post: “Will Obama Fight for
Afghanistan?”.
-
A
report
by Natalie Feduschak in yesterday’s Washington Times: “Poles, Jews
coming to terms with history”.
-
A
book review from last Sunday’s Washington Times: “War and
linguistics, Vatican spies” by Joseph C. Goulden.
The books are: “Deciphering the Rising Sun” by Roger Dingman, Naval
Institute Press, $29.95, 340 p. illus. and
“Spies in the Vatican” by John O. Koehler, Pegasus Books, $26.95,
296 p. illus.
|
|
September 6 |
-
A
book review by
Gerard DeGroot in today’s Washington Post: “When the Iron Curtain
Unraveled”.
The book is “The Year that Changed the World” ‘The Untold Story
Behind the Fall of the Berlin Wall’ by Michael Meyer, Scribner, 239
p. $26.
-
A
report
by Audrey Kauffmann in last Friday’s Washington Times: “Hitler’s
Olympic deception” There is reference to a Hungarian athlete, Ibolya
Csak, who won a gold medal.
-
A brief
report from
the Embassy Row column of the September 2 issue of the Washington
Times by James Morrison: “Gays in Hungary”.
|
|
September 2 |
-
An
op-ed by
columnist Anne Applebaum in last Sunday’s Washington Post: “The
Polish Prologue”.
-
A
report by
Deborah Dietsch in last Sunday’s Washington Times on the research of
Ms. Nancy Yeide of the National Gallery of Art on art stolen in
Nazi-occupied Europe: “ART: Sleuthing for looted paintings”.
-
A
commentary by
Helle Dale of the Heritage Foundation in the September 1, 2009 issue
of the Washington Times: “Obama not smooth on Gdansk”.
|
|
August 29 |
-
An
article
from The Economist with the title: “Frost bite” ‘Icy relations
between Hungary and Slovakia turn even frostier’.
-
A
report from Jon Ward
in the August 25 issue of the Washington Times: “Obama’s term
‘empire of envoys’. Matthew Mosk and David R. Sands contributed to
the report.
-
In the same issue, a book
review by Sol
Schindler: “Major Farran’s Hat”.
The book is “Major Farran’s Hat: The Untold Story of the Struggle to
Establish the Jewish State” by David Cesarini, Da Capo Press, $26,
302 p. illus.
|
|
August 25 |
-
An
op-ed
by columnist Masha Lipman in yesterday’s Washington Post: “Where
Violence Flourishes”.
-
From Sunday’s Washington Post, a
report by T.R.
Reid: “5 Myths About Health Care Around the World”.
-
As the school year starts, a
psychologist argues that teaching and learning requires substantial
preparation and involvement on part of educators and parents. From
Sunday’s Washington Times, Gabriella Boston
reports:
“Kid’s brains not ready for analytical thought”.
|
|
August 19 |
-
An
article in
today’s Washington Post by Adam Bernstein on the passing of reporter
Robert D. Novak (1931-2009): “Combative Writer Broke High Stake
Scoops”.
-
In the same issue, fellow columnist
David Broder
comments on Robert Novak: “The Company Bob Novak kept”.
-
From last Sunday’s Washington Times, a
report by Ann
Geracimos on the new director of the National Institutes of Health,
Dr. Francis S. Collins: “NIH Director Speaks ‘Language of God’ “.
|
|
August 7 |
-
An
article from the
August 6 issue of The Washington Times by Robert Barr: “Britain’s
last WWI vet to be honored at funeral”.
-
Two book reviews from the same paper:
One by Doug Bandow. The
book is
“First Do No Harm: Humanitarian Intervention and the Destruction of
Yugoslavia” by David N. Gibbs, Vanderbuilt U. Press, $27.95, 327 p.
-
The other is by Martin Sieff, with a
review entitled: “When Charles met Suleyman”.
The book
is “Defenders of the Faith” by James Reston Jr., Penguin Press,
$29.95, 407 p.
There is a reference to the battle of Mohacs in Hungary.
|
|
July 23 |
-
An
article
in today’s Washington Times, on the new U.S. Ambassador to Romania,
Mark Gitenstein.
-
From today’s Wall Street Journal a
book review by
Norman Lebrecht: “Genius in Exile”.
The book is “A Windfall of Musicians” by Dorothy Lamb Crawford.
There is a reference to composer Bela Bartok.
|
|
July 18 |
-
An
op-ed
in yesterday’s Washington Post by Tanya Lokshina, Deputy Director of
Human Rights Watch in Russia, commenting on the murder of Natasha
Estemirova: “Another Voice Silenced in Russia”.
-
An
op-ed by
columnist Michael Gerson in last Wednesday’s issue of the Washington
Post, on the appointment of Francis Collins to lead the National
Institutes of Health : “Obama’s Scientific Peacemaker”.
-
A book
review in the
Thursday’s issue of the Washington Post by Michael Dirda: “A Woman
of Masterful Persuasion”.
The book is “American Austen” ‘The Forgotten Writing of Agnes
Repplier’ Edited by John Lukacs, ISI, $25, 354 p.
|
|
July 11 |
-
An
obituary
of Gen. Bela Kiraly (1912-2009) by George Gomori in The Guardian of
July 9.
-
In yesterday’s issue of the Washington
Times, the ‘Embassy Row’
column,
featuring departing press secretary of the Hungarian Embassy in
Washington, DC, Zoltan Feher.
-
An opinion
piece
by Arnaud de Borchgrave in Thursday’s issue of the Washington Times:
“Israeli know-how”. There is a reference to the Hungarian Revolution
of 1956.
|
|
July 7 |
-
An
article in the Washington Times of
July 6 by Nicholas Clayton on the Nabucco gas pipeline. There is a
reference to Hungary.
-
A book
review by Marie Arana in the
Washington Post of July 2. The book is “The Ascent of George
Washington” ‘The Hidden Political Genius of An American Icon’ by
John Ferling, Bloomsbury, $30, 438 p.
-
A book
review by Martin Ruben on two
books by James G. McDonald in the Sunday, July 5, issue of the
Washington Times: “one of the unsung angels in the dreadful story
of Hitler’s Holocaust”.
|
|
July 3 |
In the Wall Street Journal of July 2,
two articles related to
Thomas Jefferson.
-
“Two Centuries On, A Cryptologist
Cracks a Presidential Code” by Rachel E.
Silverman and “Thomas
Jefferson, Musician” by Barrymore L.
Scherer.
-
In the Washington Times of June 29, an
article about Apostle St. Paul: “Remains of St. Paul Confirmed”.
|
|
June 28 |
-
A
commentary by Jeremy Lott in the
June 25 issue of Politico: “Will U.S. boots march on Iran?”.
-
An opinion
piece by former prime
minister of Spain, Jose Marias Aznar in the June 27 issue of the
Wall Street Journal: “Silence Has Consequences for Iran”, ‘The less
we protest, the more people will die’.
-
In the June 26 issue of the Wall
Street Journal, a book
review by Marc Arkin: “Highway to Heaven”.
The book is: “Predestination: The American Career of a Contentious
Doctrine” by Peter J. Thuesen, Oxford, 307 p. $29.95.
|
|
June 24 |
-
An
op-ed by Masha Lipman in last
Saturday’s Washington Post: “Russia, Again Evading History”.
-
An
op-ed by Anne Applebaum in
yesterday’s Washington Post: “An Overlooked Force in Iran”.
-
In the same issue, an
op-ed by Andrew
S. Natsios: “Obama, Adrift on Sudan”.
|
|
June 22 |
-
A
commentary related to developments
in Iran, by Susan Jacoby in last Saturday’s Washington Post:
“Theocracy Destroys Democracy”.
-
In yesterday’s issue of the Washington
Post, an op-ed by columnist Michael Gerson: “Realism in Iran? It’s
Called Freedom”.
Both writers mention, in their
respective opinion pieces, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.
|
|
June 19 |
A report and two
opinion pieces about the situation in Iran.
-
A
report from today’s Wall Street Journal,
‘Voices from Iran’ by editor Bari Weiss: ‘The Fear Is Gone’.
-
In today’s Washington Post, an
op-ed by Charles Krauthammer, with the title: “Hope and Change – but Not
for Iran”.
-
Also, in the same issue of the
Washington Post, Paul Wolfowitz has an
op-ed entitled: “ ‘No
Comment’ is Not an Option”.
|
|
June 13 |
-
An
commentary from last Tuesday’s
Washington Times by Tony Blankley: “Europe asks: Does tomorrow
belong to us?”
The article comments on the victory of center-right parties in
elections to the EU parliament, including Fidesz. There is also
reference to the Jobbik party in Hungary.
-
From the Embassy Row
column of June
11, Hungarian foreign minister Peter Balazs, visited Washington
and met with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and spoke of
the “danger of nationalism” at the European Institute in
Washington.
In the same column, political analyst
Reinhard Schlinkert made comments on the European parliamentary
elections to an audience at the Friederich Naumann Foundation in
Washington, suggesting potential tensions between Slovaks and
Hungarians and between Romanians and Hungarians, stating that in the
elections “most moderate people did not vote”.
|
|
May 30 |
-
An
article from
yesterday’s Washington Times: “Britain’s New Revolution” by Richard
Rahn.
-
In the same issue a
commentary by Emmett
Tyrell: “ACLU talks too much”.
-
An
article in
yesterday’s Wall Street Journal: “Look Who’s a Believer Now” by
Timothy Larsen.
|
|
May 28 |
-
A book
review in last Sunday’s
Washington Post by Alice Schroeder: “The Man Who Owned America”.
The book is “The First Tycoon” ‘The Epic Life of Cornelius
Vanderbilt’ by T.J. Stiles.
-
An
article from the Washington Post of
May 26: “Credit Crisis Cassandra” ‘Brooksley Born Unheeded Warning
Is a Rueful Echo 10 Years On’ by Manuel Roig-Franzia with
contribution by staff researcher Alice Crites.
-
A
commentary by Gary Bauer in
yesterday’s Washington Times on Supreme Court nominee Sonia
Sotomayor: “An ideological choice” ‘Time for Republicans to put up a
fight’.
|
|
May 25 |
-
An
article from yesterday’s Washington Post: “A
Conversation With Nahu Ribadu, Anti-Corruption Crusader in Nigeria.”
He currently lives in exile and there were two attempts on his life.
(Interview with Outlook editor John Pomfret.)
-
“What the Tigers Taught Al-Qaeda” by
Mia Bloom.
-
An
article on Spain’s judicial
activism by David Bosco.
|
|
May 15 |
-
An
article by Kara
Rowland on the rush to pass laws on Capitol Hill: “Forecast cloudy
for transparency” in last Tuesday’s Washington Times.
-
In the same issue, a book
review by Martin
Sieff. The book is “Surrender: Appeasing Islam, Sacrificing Freedom”
by Bruce Bawer, Doubleday, $24.95, 352 p.
-
An
article from
yesterday’s Washington Times: “Journalist’s lens captures Darfur’s
‘forgotten people’ “ by J. Ross Baughman.
|
|
May 12 |
-
A
review by
Gary Anderson in Sunday’s Washington Times. The book is “How Rome
Fell: Death of a Superpower” by Adrian Goldsworthy.
-
A
review by
Alexandra Fuller in Sunday’s Washington Post. The book is: “This
Child Will Great” Memoir of A Remarkable Life by Africa’s First
Woman President by Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
-
In the same issue, a
review by
Benjamin Carter Hett. The book is “The Third Reich at War” by
Richard J. Evans.
|
|
April 29 |
-
A book
review
from The Washington Times by John Weisman. The book is “Hunting
Eichamann” by Neal Bascomb.
-
A book
review in
last Sunday’s Washington Post: “The Final Triumph of Chiang Kai-Shek”
by Laura Tyson Li.
The book is “Generalissimo” by Jay Taylor, Belknap, 722 pp. $35.
|
|
April 21 |
-
An
op-ed by
Anne Applebaum in today’s Washington Post on Moldova and Romania:
“The Twitter Revolution that Wasn’t”.
-
An
op-ed by Jackson Diehl in
yesterday’s Washington Post: “A World of Trouble for Obama”.
-
An
op-ed by Robert
Samuelson in the same issue: “Our Depression Obsession”.
|
|
April 19 |
-
An
article on the
American financial sector in the upcoming issue of The Atlantic
Monthly by Simon Johnson, professor at the Sloan School of
Management at MIT and chief economist at the International Monetary
Fund during 2007 and 2008. Mr. James Kwak also contributed to this
essay, with the title: “The Quiet Coup”.
|
|
April 16 |
-
An
article on the dollar
as reserve currency, in today’s Washington Times, by George H.
Lesser: “SDR’s draw down on dollar?”.
-
An
op-ed by
columnist Michael Gerson in yesterday’s Washington Post: “A Searcher
with Faith in Mind”.
-
An
article by Cathy
Young in the Wall Street Journal of April 14, on the 200th
anniversary of the birth of Nikolai Gogol, (1809-1852): “Gogol Gets
Caught in a Tug of Love”.
|
|
April 10 |
-
An
op-ed by
William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, in The Washington
Post of April 7: "A World Without Nukes - Just Like 1939".
-
A
commentary by
Ariel Cohen in today's Washington Times: "Turkey's dangerous shift".
-
A book
review by
Martin Sieff in the Washington Times of April 7: "Cheap, clean,
unlimited energy?"
The book is: "Sun in a Bottle: The Strange History of Fusion and the
Science of Wishful Thinking " by Charles Seife, Viking, $25.95,
294p.
There is reference to Hungarian-born physicist Edward Teller.
|
|
April 7 |
-
From last Sunday's Outlook section of the
Washington Post, excerpts of an
interview with a
U.S. official on the ongoing drug war in Mexico, with spillover into
some American states: "A Conversation With Terry Goddard, Attorney
General of Arizona".
-
An
op-ed by
columnist Robert Samuelson in yesterday's Washington Post: "China's
Dollar Deception".
-
A
comment by
columnist Nat Hentoff in yesterday's Washington Times on the never
ending tragedy of the persecuted people in Darfur : "The forgotten
people: A 'final solution' proceeds apace".
|
|
March 29 |
-
An
opinion piece from the Outlook
Section of today' s Washington Post: "Argentina? Almost. Welcome to
Life in Emerging Market, USA" by Desmond Lachman, fellow at the
American Enterprise Institute, former Chief Emerging Market
Strategist at Solomon Smith and Barney, and former deputy director
of the Policy and Review Department of the International Monetary
Fund.
-
In the same issue of the Washington
Post, an op-ed on the HIV-AIDS epidemic, focusing on Africa: "The
Pope May be Right" by Edward C. Green, researcher at the Harvard
School of Public Health.
-
An
article from the Weekend Edition of the Wall
Street Journal: "Eastern Europe and the Financial Crisis" by David
Roche.
|
|
March 26 |
-
A brief
write up on Charles
Simonyi second trip into space by David Nowak.
-
An
op-ed by Arnaud de Borchgrave in today's Washington Times: "Digitized
News" 'Newspapers' collapse threatens democracy'.
-
In the same issue of The Washington Times a
book review
by Priscilla Taylor: "The New Deal's best friend".
The book is "The Woman Behind the New Deal: the
Life of Frances Perkins, FDR's Secretary of Labor and His Moral
Conscience" by Kirstin Downey, Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $35, 458 p.
illus.
|
|
March 20 |
-
A book
review
in yesterday's Washington Times by Martin Sieff: "Masterful forecast
of colliding trends".
The book is "A Brief History of the Future: A Brave and
Controversial Look at the Twenty-First Century" by Jacques Attali
Arcade, $25, 312 p.
|
|
March 9 |
-
An
issue from the
Embassy Row column of The Washington Times featuring Imre Szekeres,
Defense Minister of Hungary, who is visiting Washington this week.
-
In the same issue, a
report by Maria
Danilova writes on the economic crisis, focusing on Ukraine. There
are also brief references to Poland, Romania and Hungary.
|
|
March 8 |
-
An
op-ed by Jackson Diehl in today's Washington
Post: "George W. Obama".
|
|
March 6 |
-
A
commentary by Arnaud de Borchgrave in today's
Washington Times on the top appointments at the National
Intelligence Council: "Freeman's unpardonable 'sin' ".
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March 3 |
-
An
op-ed by Anne
Applebaum in today's Washington Post: "European Disunion". There are
references to Hungary and Hungarians, including the prime minister.
-
A
report in today's
Washington Times by Sara Carter: "100,000 foot soldiers in Mexican
cartels".
-
An
op-ed by
Bret Stephens in today's Wall Street Journal: "In Praise of Mexico's
War on Drugs" 'Complacency and corruption are the real enemies'.
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February 16 |
-
A book
review on Abraham
Lincoln in last Friday's Wall Street Journal: "Abe as He Really Was"
by John A. Barnes.
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February 12 |
-
An opinion
piece by Newt Gingrich,
former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, in yesterday' s
Washington Times: " Where does the conservative movement go from
here?".
-
An
article by
Philip Kennicott in yesterday's Washington Post commenting on an
exhibit of Nazi propaganda in the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum of
Washington, DC: "Hitler's Terrible Weapon: Publicity".
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February 6 |
-
An
op-ed by the
president of Poland, Lech Kaczynski in yesterday's Washington Times:
"Time to reflect and to act" 'Poland's president expresses
solidarity with America'.
-
A book
review
from Tuesday's edition of The Washington Times by Carrie Sheffileld:
"Statistics, graphs at heart of election analysis".
The book is "How Barack Obama Won: A State-by-State Guide to the
Historic 2008 Presidential Election" by Chuck Todd and Sheldon
Gawiser, Vintage, $12.95, 272 p.
-
From the January 27 issue of The New York
Times: A brief music
review of
The Budapest Festival Orchestra under the direction of Ivan Fischer
at Carnegie Hall by James R. Oestreich.
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February 3 |
-
An
article from
the Sunday's Outlook section of the Washington Post. The writer
argues that the Roosevelt era New Deal was an economic failure and
the current Administration should not attempt to repeat a similar
program: "FDR was a Great Leader, But His Economic Plan Isn't One to
Follow".
-
An
article on
reforming lobbying by Robert Kaiser also in the Washington Post. The
piece includes a comment by Sen. Christopher Dodd: "Stuck in the
Revolving Door".
-
An
article
from yesterday's Washington Times: "Priest documents 'Holocaust by
Bullets' in Eastern Europe" by Maria Danilova and Randy Herschaft.
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January 29 |
-
An
op-ed by Marie Arana in today's
Washington Post: "Renegade Updike".
-
An
op-ed in yesterday's Washington
post by columnist Michael Gerson: "Weasels vs. AIDS relief".
-
A
Letter to the Editor in Tuesday's
Washington Times: "Taking life lightly".
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January 27 |
-
An
article from yesterday's Washington
Post: "Economic Crisis Fuels Unrest in E. Europe".
-
An
op-ed by columnist Anne Applebaum
in today's Washington Post: "Democracy They Can't Imagine".
-
An opinion
piece in today's New York
Times by Gary Schaub: "Really Soft Power".
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January 16 |
-
A
commentary by
György Schöpflin, member of the European Parliament for Hungary, in
the Eurobserver: "The Slovak-Hungarian 'cold war' ".
-
From yesterday's Washington Post, an
article by
Jura Koncius on a Hungarian-born artist named Anna Weatherly of
Arlington, Virginia, who designs and paints dinnerware for the White
House: "The Dish on Designer of Bush China".
-
From last Sunday's Washington Times, a
commentary by
Kevin J. Hasson and Luke W. Goodrich: "Does Obama respect conscience
? ".
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January 15 |
-
In yesterday's Washington Post,
columnist Michael
Gerson: "Apostle of Life".
-
In Tuesday's issue of the New York
Times, op-ed
columnist David Brooks: "In Defense of Death".
-
In last weekend's issue of the Wall
Street Journal, an
article by
Stephen Miller: "Restless Intellectual Yoked Catholics and
Evangelicals".
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January 13 |
-
An
op-ed in today's Washington Post by
Anne Applebaum: "Short End of the Pipeline ".
The article has a good quote on the European Union by an unnamed
Hungarian friend of the columnist. The opinion piece also has a
picture with the caption: "Cutting wood for heat on Sunday in a
Hungarian village east of Budapest".
-
From yesterday's Washington Post, an
op-ed by David Broder: "An Early Drubbing for Obama".
-
From last Sunday's Washington Times, a
comment by
Edward Peck: "Political ambassadors".
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|
January 11 |
-
From The New York Times of January 5:
"Memo from Pravda" 'In Eastern Europe, Lives Languish in Mental
Facilities' There is a
reference to a Budapest-based NGO: the Mental
Disability Advocacy Center.
-
An
op-ed in the January 9 issue of the
Wall Street Journal: "Alternative' Medicine Is Mainstream" by
Deepak Chopra, Dean Ornish, Rustum Roy and Andrew Weill.
-
An
article by Marcia Angell in the
current issue of The New York Review of Books: "Drug Companies &
Doctors: A Story of Corruption".
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|
January 6 |
-
An
op-ed in
today's Washington Times by Arnaud de Borchgrave: "Israel' s end
game".
-
A book
review from
last Sunday's issue of the Washington Times by Gary Anderson: "The
rise, demise of an empire".
The book is "The Decline and Fall of the British Empire" by Piers
Brendon, Knopf, $37.50, 816 p.
-
A book
review
from today's Washington Times by Peter Hannaford: "Vignettes from a
remarkable friendship".
The book is "The Reagan I Knew" by William Buckley, Jr., Basic Books,
$16.50, 267 p.
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|
January 2 |
-
An op-ed
by Peggy Noonan in the Wall Street Journal of December 26:
"A Year for the Books" 'Mother Teresa's secret, and other
revelations from 2008'
-
A Book
Review in the
Wall Street of December 25: "Chronicle of A Council" by Edward T.
Oakes S.J. The book is "What Happened at Vatican II" by John W. O'
Malley, Harvard/Belknap, $29.95, 380 p.
-
A Book
Review in the Washington Times of December 28: "Bolshevik
finance, Soviet secrets" by Joseph C. Goulden. The book is:
"History's Greatest Heist: The Looting of Russia by the Bolsheviks",
by Sean McMeekin, Yale University Press, $38, 302p.
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